Crowded into a small, rented room near the federal capital, an Afghan family of 12 is waiting, like thousands of others, for progress on their applications to go to the United States as refugees.
As time passes, their money is running out and their worries are growing. In a small kitchen, 18-year old Marwa, whose father used to work as a guard for an American aid organisation, cuts vegetables.
The family have applied for resettlement in the US under a special programme for Afghans who worked for US organisations, known as P2.
"We cook and eat twice a day, some days we eat even less to save money," she said. Reuters is withholding the full names of family members for security reasons.
They sold their home in Afghanistan and left last year, having been told by US authorities to travel to a third country to get their application processed.
Marwa's husband, Khalilzad, estimates the family's saving would last for at most two more months. "It's been two years and things have not improved, they should consider our basic need and speed things up, the process is moving very slowly," Khalilzad said.
For thousands of Afghans applying for refugee status and visas in the West, neighbouring Pakistan was their only option. Between 16,000 and 20,000 applicants for the P2 programme are estimated to be in Pakistan, according to community members and advocates. Most Afghans are not allowed to work and are ineligible for public education and healthcare.
Many had built middle-class lives in Afghanistan in the two decades after the United States and its allies intervened in 2001. Now they face destitution in Pakistan where the government, grappling with an economic crisis, is increasingly anxious about the number of Afghans arriving, at times at the request of Western governments, Pakistani officials say.
Afghans waiting for their applications say they fear being detained by Pakistani authorities, as many Afghans have anecdotally reported, so they stay indoors as much as they can.'LIKE PRISON'The children of the family have not been able to go to school for more than a year.
On a recent stifling summer day, Asra, 14, was going through the alphabet with her younger siblings. "I teach them sometimes but I'm worried that neither they nor I go to school ... every day I'm at home like a prisoner."
Asra was barred from school in Afghanistan where the Taliban closed girls' high-schools after their return to power in 2021.
"I suffer a lot when I see other girls going to school. I'm very anxious when I see them going and I can't," she said. "I want to go to America with my family and continue my studies, I want to become a judge," she said.
'PROBLEMS'
A US government watchdog, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, said in April that problems in P2 processing had been identified and lawmakers had required reports on processing times and staffing shortages. "However, these reports are not public, and problems persist," the agency said.
A spokesperson for the US State Department said: "Our processing capacity in Pakistan remains limited, but we are actively working to try to expand it." Shawn VanDiver, the founder of #AfghanEvac, a coalition of US volunteer groups helping Afghans resettle, said there had recently been progress in P2 processing.
"It's light years ahead of where we were a month ago," VanDiver said. But he warned that processing was "limited in scope" and "not going to be fast". He declined to provide details due to concern over triggering a flood of hopeful applicants into Pakistan.
He acknowledged that a major problem had been the failure to keep applicants informed. "Communications ... have been a disaster," he said. "They've served to cause chaos and confusion and despair. The Afghans are just sitting around waiting."
The Khalilzad family's last official contact was a cursory email in May. "Our remaining money will last one or two more months, if this runs out ... what can we do?" he said.
"People have become depressed ... we are in a state of uncertainty with no destiny."
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